Richard Spencer, a known white supremacist, has made waves with his appearances across the country. He’s given speeches at numerous universities, quoting Nazi propaganda and denouncing Jews during some.

Spencer’s speeches have brought forth many protests, some which have turned violent as Antifa clashed with the demonstrators.

Spencer had been married to Nina Kouprianova for years, but it was reported they separated last year. However, recent reports indicate they’re still together and live in Montana with their daughter.

According to a September interview with Observer, Kouprianova was born in Moscow and then moved to Canada with her family. She said that her parents were scientists and “part of the well-known brain-drain immigration wave of” the mid-1990s in Russia.

While she was raised in Russia and spoke the native language, she studied English a lot while growing up, and said she had virtually no problem adjusting to everyday use of the language. But she was met with a “culture shock” upon making the move while trying to adjust to the Canadian lifestyle.

Kouprianova first met Spencer in 2009, back when he was an editor at Takimag. She said that she was intrigued by his interest level in the Ron Paul for president movement and they started a romantic relationship together.

They got married shortly thereafter and now have a young daughter together. The family resides in Whitefish, Montana.

Because of the amount of criticism Spencer receives, Kouprianova said her family is the victim of many “witch hunts.” She wrote a letter to the Flathead Beacon describing the personal attacks as to the way her grandfather was forced to live in the Soviet Union. She spoke about an incident in 2014 when she suffered constant threats of violence because of her husband’s controversial views and outspokenness.

I was heavily pregnant at that time and feared complications due to incurred stress. Recently, things have escalated further. Our family has received numerous threats of violence, and addresses thought to belong to us were illegally publicized inviting people with baseball bats to pay us a visit — in fact, a writer for Politico was asked to resign for doing so. Our extended family, friends, acquaintances, and associates had their business and livelihoods threatened with boycotts or anonymous phone calls to their respective places of employment. Many of these actions occurred under the Orwellian banner of “human rights.”

Having grown up in the Soviet Union, I am particularly sensitive to such witch hunts. They bring up painful ancestral memories. In the 1930s, a number of my family members had perished in the Stalinist system. One of them was my great grandfather, a priest in the Russian Orthodox Church. As a community leader, he was seen as a threat to the new atheist government. My great grandfather refused to publicly deny the existence of God, and local Communist authorities imprisoned him. Then — according to the information that we received — they shot him right in his jail cell. My grandfather grew up as the son of the “enemy of the people.” Threats and intimidation, which my current extended family continues to experience in Whitefish, remind me of the way my grandfather was forced to live.

Like her husband, Kouprianova has also been outspoken, but primarily on Russian politics and has previously said the country’s invasion of eastern Ukraine was a “liberation war.”

In the Observer profile, she said that she supports some of the things President Donald Trump has done, but finds others “disappointing.”

“He failed to drain that proverbial swamp,” she wrote in an email to Observer.

Throughout the past year, Kouprianova has worked at translating the writings of Alexander Dugin, a Russian political philosopher known for his neo-facist views, on a volunteer basis. There have been past reports of Dugin’s possible ties to Russian President Vladimir Putin, though Kouprianova, who said she’s never met Dugin in person, told The Daily Beast there’s “no evidence” of any communications between the two. Dugin’s name recently appeared on a U.S. government list of sanctions because of his believed ties with Putin.